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Black History 365 | # 215 Martin Delany

May 4, 2025

Martin R. Delany was an African American abolitionist, writer, editor, doctor, and politician. Born in Charles Town in what is now West Virginia, he was the first Black field officer in the United States Army, serving as a major during and after the American Civil War (1861–1865), and was among the first Black nationalists. A fiercely independent thinker and wide-ranging writer, he coedited with Frederick Douglass the abolitionist newspaper North Star and later penned a manifesto calling for Black emigration from the United States to Central America. He also authored Blake; or, The Huts of America, a serial publication about a fugitive enslaved man who, in the tradition of Nat Turner, organizes insurrection. In his later life, Delany was a judge and an unsuccessful candidate for lieutenant governor of South Carolina. Despite this, he remains relatively unknown. “His was a magnificent life,” W. E. B. Du Bois wrote in 1936, “and yet, how many of us have heard of him?” Historians have tended to pigeonhole Delany’s contributions, emphasizing his more radical views (which were celebrated in the 1970s), while giving less attention to the extraordinary complexity of his career.

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Black History 365 | # 214 Ronald E. McNair

May 3, 2025

After earning a B.S. degree in physics, Ronald E. McNair completed a Ph.D. at MIT in 1977 and conducted research on electro-optic laser modulation for satellite space communications before applying to become an astronaut. In January 1978, he was selected as part of NASA’s eighth astronaut class, one of the first three African Americans selected. He became NASA’s second Black American to go to space in February 1984 with STS-41B. On January 28, 1986, he was one of seven astronauts who died on Space Shuttle Challenger. He and his six STS-51L crew mates died when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded after launch. Rest in peace, safe travels.

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Black History 365 | # 213 Zeb Powell

May 2, 2025

Zeb Powell is too cold widdit, pun intended. Not to mention, he is the first black snowboarder to win a gold medal at the X Games in 2020. Residing from North Carolina, he developed a love for snowboarding through skateboarding. Once the skatepark shut down he leaned into snowboarding seasonally at a place called Catalucci. The rest is history. Zeb Powell is the most creative snowboarder ever. He credits it to his ADD. Highly advise that you watch him in action. Truly art in motion. The attention from his X Games victory put a spotlight on how few Black athletes are represented in professional snowboarding, and it lit a fire inside him to start initiatives like the Slide-In Tour and Culture Shifters to help change the face of the sport. It's working, fast. PEACE! @zebpowelll

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Black History 365 | # 212 The History of Capoeira

May 1, 2025

Capoeira developed as a result of more than three hundred years of slavery in Brazil. Enslaved Africans were taken by Portuguese colonists from various cultures in Africa. In Brazil, generations of enslaved African people shared the cultural customs, dances, rituals, and fighting techniques that would combine to become capoeira. Slaves used capoeira to fight to escape and resist capture, but concealed its combative purpose through music, song, and dance. Fueled by the burning desire for freedom. It soon became widely practiced on the plantations as a means of breaking the bonds of slavery, both physically and mentally. During this time, the art was considered a social infirmity and officially prohibited by the Brazilian Penal Code. Between 1500 and 1815, Brazil was a colony of the Portuguese Crown—an empire sustained by slave labor. The enslaved resisted in various forms: armed revolt, poisoning their owners, abortion and escape. The vastness of the Brazilian inlands made it possible for individuals on the run to hide. Some escaped and formed clandestine communities in the backlands of the rainforest, independent villages known as quilombos. Here, the Africans and their descendants developed an autonomous socio-cultural system in which they could sustain various expressions of African culture. The basic aesthetic elements of capoeira were brought to Brazil by enslaved people, primarily from west and west-central Africa. These elements were recombined and reinterpreted within the diverse enslaved community of Brazil to create a unique means of self defense, both driven and disguised—as merely a dance—by its musical accompaniment. Slavery was abolished in Brazil in 1888, but capoeira continued to flourish within the Afro-Brazilian population, particularly in the northeastern state of Bahia. The government, however, recognizing the physical and spiritual potency of the art form and considering it a threat to society, continued to outlaw the practice until the early 20th century. Real hater sh*t right there.

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Black History 365 | # 211 Anita Hill

April 30, 2025

Anita Hill was born July 30, 1956 in Lone Tree, Oklahoma. She received a bachelor's degree in psychology from Oklahoma State University in 1977 and her Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 1980. She began her law career as an associate with a Washington, D.C. law firm. In 1981, she became an attorney-advisor to Clarence Thomas, then the assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights. When Thomas became chairman of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1982, Hill followed and served as his assistant. In 1991, President George H. W. Bush nominated Clarence Thomas, then a federal circuit judge, to the U.S. Supreme Court. After Senate confirmation hearings were initially completed with little opposition, a report of an interview of Hill by the FBI was leaked to the press. She became a national figure in 1991 when she accused U.S. Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment during her tenure. Hill's accusation resulted in her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee. During her questioning, a number of senators accused her of lying and raised doubts about her sanity. Thomas later denied the allegations, accusing the committee of a “high-tech lynching.” Although other women reportedly could have supported Hill’s testimony, they were never called by the committee. In the end, Thomas was narrowly confirmed, 52–48. In addition, the manner in which the all-male Senate Judiciary Committee questioned Hill during her testimony is said to have inspired the record number of women who ran for office and were elected to Congress in 1992, the "Year of the Woman." She became a visiting scholar at Brandeis University, eventually rising to university professor (2015). In addition to numerous articles, Hill wrote the autobiography Speaking Truth to Power (1997) as well as Reimagining Equality: Stories of Gender, Race, and Finding Home (2011) and Believing: Our Thirty-Year Journey to End Gender Violence (2021).

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